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crimp terminals for the aluminum rg-6 type coax
On 5/8/2014 10:29 AM, Ralph Mowery wrote:
"Jerry Stuckle" wrote in message ... Are you sure the braid is aluminum and not silver coated copper? We use RG-6-quad, which has two layers of foil alternating with two layers of silvered copper braid. I don't have that much experiance with the rg-6, but I have never seen any that used silver coated copper. Just way too expensive for the cable TV industry. I have used lots of silver coated rg-400 and rg-214. They take solder very well. The rg-6 braid I have seen will not take solder. I have used regular 60/40 and some silver bearing solder also. Have used several soldering guns up to the largest Weller (thinking around 325 watts ) gun. I have been a ham for over 40 years and put on lots of pl259 solder connectors and lately the crimp on 259, bnc and N types. Just lately I may put up an antenna that needs to have a 1/4 wavelength of 70 ohm coax as a matching segment. I have some rg-6 laying around the house,but not any rg59 or rg11. Just trying to find something that will let me connect that braid that I can not solder to to a # 14 stranded wire and will stand up being outside. All of the RG-6 we use has silver-coated copper braid with an aluminum foil. But as I said above, we use quad shield. Yes, it's more expensive, but worth the extra cost. One callback to replace a bad cable can easily cost more than a 500' reel of the stuff. Over the last 11 years, we've had zero callbacks due to cable problems. We install thousands of feet of it every year. One other thing I forgot to mention. Aluminum oxidizes very easily, and if it's crimped to a non-aluminum connector the problem is even worse. Ensure you waterproof it. My recommendation if you use the female F connector you mentioned in another post is, once you have it all together and ensure it's working correctly, seal it thoroughly. Dipping in a non-conductive epoxy based sealer is best. That way there's no way for water to get in. Sure, if you have to replace it you'll have to cut off the connector. But you'll have to do that anyway with a crimp connector. -- ================== Remove the "x" from my email address Jerry, AI0K ================== |
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